A Heart of Many Rooms: Celebrating the Many Voices within Judaism
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“This work is not addressed only to scholars of Judaism or theologians, but also, and primarily, to all Jews and non-Jews who would like to share the thoughts and struggles of a person who loves Torah and Halakhah, who is committed to helping make room for and celebrate the religious and cultural diversity present in the modern world, and who believes that a commitment to Israel and to Jewish particularity must be organically connected to the rabbinic teaching, ‘Beloved are all human beings created in the image of God.’”
—from the Introduction
With clarity, passion, and outstanding scholarship, David Hartman addresses the spiritual and theological questions that face all Jews and all people today. From the perspective of traditional Judaism, he helps us understand the varieties of twentieth-century Jewish practice and shows that commitment to both Jewish tradition and to pluralism can create bridges of understanding between people of different religious convictions.
David Hartman
A world-renowned philosopher and social activist, Dr. David Hartman (z"l) is the founder and president emeritus of the Shalom Hartman Institute in Jerusalem. Named after his late father, the Institute is dedicated to developing a new understanding of classical Judaism that provides moral and spiritual direction for Judaism's confrontation with modernity. Presently professor emeritus at Hebrew University in Jerusalem, he received his rabbinic ordination from Yeshiva University's theological seminary in New York City. He is the author of many award-winning books, including A Living Covenant: The Innovative Spirit in Traditional Judaism (Jewish Lights) and Maimonides: Torah and Philosophic Quest, both winners of the National Jewish Book Award; A Heart of Many Rooms: Celebrating the Many Voices within Judaism (Jewish Lights), finalist for the National Jewish Book Award and a Publishers Weekly "Best Book of the Year"; and Love and Terror in the God Encounter: The Theological Legacy of Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik (Jewish Lights).
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A Heart of Many Rooms - David Hartman
PART I
FAMILY AND MITZVAH WITHIN
AN INTERPRETIVE TRADITION
1
JUDAISM AS AN
INTERPRETIVE TRADITION
A LIVING TRADITION can provide a person with a critical perspective on contemporary social reality by pointing to alternative possibilities and by providing a sense of distance that enables one to evaluate current beliefs and practices. Being anchored to a tradition that predates modernity, such as Judaism, gives one access to an alternative vision of human possibilities. It thus counteracts the ideological prejudice of modernity that equates the now
with the good,
and the latest
with the important and valuable.
Yet, tradition is itself challenged when people become aware of new values and possibilities in the surrounding culture, which invariably affect their moral intuitions and attitudes. Morality does not develop in abstraction from the lived reality into which human beings are born. Our moral sense and conscience are nurtured by life–be it social, economic, or cultural–and not necessarily by books and formal education.
I myself feel this kind of paradoxical relationship to modern culture, this complicated alternation between attraction and repulsion, affinity and estrangement. On one level, I embrace modern culture; on another level, I am often critical of and repelled by it. I relate to modernity with both openness and reservation. Both moves define my soul. I am very deeply rooted in the classical talmudic tradition, which was perpetuated in the modern world by the yeshiva (talmudic academy) Torah culture. I thus can be a kindred spirit with the Orthodox Haredi community in Jerusalem, the black hat community
who have chosen the culture of the shtetl over modernity. At times, I can truly say that I share their love of and devotion to Torah, their music, their spiritual yearnings. Yet, at other times I can join the ranks of the Zionist rebels who have rejected traditional Judaism. My soul moves in multiple and diverse directions.
While this phenomenon is a natural consequence of the interaction of different cultural traditions at any time in history, the modern situation makes a person particularly susceptible to the destabilizing effects of competing cultures and values. The modern world, as distinct from some other periods of human history, is characterized by a widespread ambiguity of moral insights and attitudes. Conflict and disagreement characterize the domain of values and human options. There is hardly any universal consensus about moral beliefs and judgments. There are deep conflicts among individuals and cultures about the meaning and role of gender, of family, and of the political, legal, and religious institutions of modern life.
This situation differs dramatically from the medieval world, where Aristotelian philosophy was considered the most perfect intellectual tradition available to human beings. Maimonides felt no qualms about reinterpreting all anthropomorphic biblical texts as metaphors because of his belief that corporeality was incompatible with what the unity of God entails. He would have been prepared to reinterpret the biblical story of creation if Aristotle had provided a valid demonstrative proof for the eternity of the universe.
For if creation in time were demonstrated–if only as Plato understands creation–all the overhasty claims made to us on this point by the philosophers would become void. In the same way, if the philosophers would succeed in demonstrating eternity as Aristotle understands it, the Law as a whole would become void, and a shift to other opinions would take place. (Guide of the Perplexed, II:26)
Our moral discourse today is filled with ambiguity, conflict, and uncertainty. And this is what makes the issue of reinterpretation of the tradition in light of modern moral insights so problematic. Ethical dilemmas in the modern practice of medicine, for example, indicate the uncertainty and indeterminacy of applying the values of respect for human life and dignity in concrete situations. How does one measure quality of life
?
Even though we lack intellectual certainty, I would argue that our situation is not unique or without precedent in the history of the Jewish tradition. The interpretive tradition, which defined Judaism in the past, was acquainted with ambiguity and controversy. In fact, rabbinic Judaism can best be described as a bold interpretive culture amidst disagreement. I shall discuss this claim on two levels: the legal and the theological. The former involves halakhic thought and practice, Judaism’s central concern as a religious and cultural phenomenon, while the latter relates to a theology of history, or more precisely, a theology of exile.
How does the tradition understand exile, and how can it respond to Zionism, a movement aimed at overcoming the reality and psychology of exile? After explaining the meaning of Judaism as an interpretive tradition from both legal and theological perspectives, I shall defend my characterization of the rebirth of the State of Israel in terms of covenantal renewal
and of other such concepts that, I believe, reflect the deep structure of Judaism.
RABBINIC CULTURE:
THE TEXT AS THE WORD OF GOD
The idea of love of God is often contrasted with the legalism of Pharisaic Judaism
in terms of the spontaneity and passion associated with the religious experience. The terms religious and halakhic are thus differentiated with reference to whether God or law is at the center of one’s religious concerns. Before evaluating this religious stereotype, I would like to draw attention to Psalm 119, where God and the word of God are often indistinguishable. The writer’s love for and worship of God are channeled toward God’s commandments.
I have turned to You with all my heart;
do not let me stray from Your commandments. (10)
I am racked with grief;
sustain me in accordance with Your word. (28)
I shall have an answer for those who taunt me,
for I have put my trust in Your word. (42)
Do not utterly take the truth away from my mouth,
for I have put my hope in Your rules. (43)
Teach me good sense and knowledge,
for I have put my trust in Your commandments. (66)
Those who fear You will see me and rejoice,
for I have put my hope in Your word. (74)
May Your mercy reach me, that I might live,
for Your teaching is my delight. (77)
I long for Your deliverance;
I hope for Your word. (81)
I will never neglect Your precepts,
for You have preserved my life through them. (93)
I am Yours; save me!
For I have turned to Your precepts. (94)
My flesh creeps from fear of You;
I am in awe of Your rulings. (120)
I rise before dawn and cry for help;
I hope for Your word. (147)
According to the letter and spirit of this text, the word of God is interchangeable with God. Torah, therefore, conveys the immediacy of God’s presence, as if it were an incarnation of God’s will and love. The language of worship, which in other biblical contexts is directed toward God,
Pour out your heart like water before the face of the Lord; lift up your hands (se’i kapaiyich) toward him for the life of your young children. (Lamentations 2:19)
is here directed, with no less intensity, toward the commandments:
And so will I lift up my hands (ve’esa kapai) unto Your commandments, which I love; and I will meditate on Your statutes. (Ps. 119:48)
This perspective is necessary for an understanding of the passional religious dimension of rabbinic culture. When you learn Torah, you meditate
on the divine word, you, so to speak, suspend belief in the written medium separating you from the author of the word and imagine yourself talking with and hearing God directly. You therefore experience the existential immediacy of being in the presence of God. The author of this psalm relates to the word and to the law in the same personal and emotive language that religious poets usually reserve for impassioned references to God. The speaker feels hope in the word,
is comforted
and revived
by God’s laws, and is able to rejoice in,
delight in,
and love
the commandments.
The word, then, at the deepest, most fundamental level of Torah culture, embodies the living reality of God. Rejoicing in the word is rejoicing in God. And, contrary to the standard interpretation of Paul’s description of mitzvah and Halakhah (Jewish law), the phrase that best describes the essence of rabbinic religiosity is not the burden of the law
but "simcha shel mitzvah, the joy of mitzvah. As in Psalm 119, the law was not considered to be a burden in any pejorative sense, because it mediated and expressed God’s love and concern. In the daily liturgy, Jews declare,
You have loved the house of Israel with everlasting love, and then proceed to substantiate this theological statement with
You have taught us Torah and precepts, laws and judgments." The prayer then concludes with
Therefore, Lord our God, when we lie down and when we rise up we will speak of Your laws, and rejoice in the words of Your Torah and in Your precepts forevermore.
God’s love is embodied in the giving of the Torah. Torah and mitzvot convey divine love and are thus a source of joy and comfort. One of the first benedictions traditional Jews say every morning refers to their being commanded to be engaged in the words of the Torah,
and, following that, they express this hope:
Lord our God, make the word of Your Torah sweet in our mouth and in the mouth of Your people, the house of Israel, so that we and our descendants and the descendants of Your people, the house of Israel, may all know Your name and study Your Torah for its own sake. Blessed are You, O Lord, who teaches the Torah to Your people Israel.
Learning,
the talmudic involvement with the interpretation of the law, is misrepresented by such derogatory labels as pharisaic legalism
or rabbinic casuistry
that totally ignore the phenomenological experience of fascination with and rejoicing in the richness and complexity of the divine word and, by implication, of the divine reality. The biblical text is understood to contain multiple layers of meaning and subtlety. Torah, no less than nature, conveys the immensity and richness of the divine reality.
It is no wonder, therefore, that not only the semantic significance of the words themselves but also their syntactic and even their physical form became objects of interpretation. Rabbi Akiva was noted for his imaginative, ingenious interpretations not only of the meaning of the words and sentences of the biblical text but also of the tagim (crownlets atop the Hebrew letters) and the ethim (particles of speech indicative of the objective case).
This seemingly extreme example of rabbinic biblical exegesis was not the result of a philological obsession but reflects the specific religious context in which the biblical text was understood. Rabbi Akiva read the Bible as an intimate love letter. He read and reread the words; he, so to speak, felt the parchment and examined the handwriting, the shapes of the letters, and the marks on the page, always looking for signs and clues to hidden meanings and secret messages.
To use modern terminology, the medium became a part of the message, conveying the rich and subtle complexity of the divine word. Consequently, the term legal text only partially and incompletely describes the text that the Torah scholar scrutinized. Even today, in yeshivot, academies of Torah learning, the student sings the words of the text and, on the holiday of Simchat Torah, dances ecstatically with the scrolls of the law. Enigmatic legal cases and narratives are recited with a characteristic chant and bodily sway as the talmudic student struggles to decipher the mysteries of the divine