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Rabbi Oury Cherki
How are Torah and Morality Related?
Translated
from Hebrew.
Published
at the Noahide World Center
website.
A. The Universal Character of Ethical Wisdom
The wisdom of morality involves the definition of good and evil,
and it therefore involves human education. This activity is universal and is not
confined to the nation of Israel. In every human society, general rules are
developed for appropriate behavior, based primarily on human nature, which is
basically decent. Even though ethical norms differ from one society to another,
the general goal of every moral code is to keep mankind honest and on a straight
path.
In every era, there are discussions among human beings on the
subject of appropriate behavior. Some questions, such as whether people should
honor their parents, have been decided and are accepted by a broad range of
people. But other questions, such as whether mankind should refrain from eating
the flesh of animals, do not yet have widespread agreement. In our era, eating
meat is not generally considered to be offensive behavior even though it
requires taking a life in order to give pleasure to a human being.
The rules of morality of various human societies are a result of
accumulated historical experience by a method of trial and error. Bildad, one of
the friends of Job, says, "Just ask the first generations and investigate their
ancestors, for we only came yesterday and our days are nothing more than a
shadow" (Job 8, 8-9). That is, with respect to basic questions, a man must
depend on the experience of earlier generations. It cannot be assumed that
everything the ancients said is absolute truth, but even based on their errors
it is possible in the end to generate a valid ethical approach. In addition, the
moral tendency of the human race has been continued to develop during our entire
history, and the result is that ethical rules have improved and have reached
higher levels than before.
B. What is the Source of Morality?
The root of the moral tendency that exists within the human soul
is the attempt to get closer to G-d. Every human society has a direct
relationship with the source of all life, and this leads to a yearning for good
and for honesty. At times, the character of the open relationship to the source
of life is so idolatrous and coarse that the only way for the human race to
advance ethically is by denying this relationship. But it should be noted in
reality this progress stems from an even more sensitive search for G-d.
Moral rules are an expression of the will of G-d, but this is
revealed in mankind through human nature and not as a command. The Holy One,
Blessed be He, created man with the ability to understand that certain types of
behavior are appropriate and others are not. For example, the human soul should
naturally demand that murder be avoided, and this is not merely a social or
religious commandment. In addition, it is possible that such trends started out
as laws written by human beings which were then transformed into a social norm,
since the human soul became adapted to them.
C. The Torah is not a Substitute for Human Morality
The Torah was not given to the nation of Israel in order to be a
substitute for human morality. Human morality should exist within a person of
Israel just as it can be found in the heart of each and every person, and the
unique spiritual level of the Torah lies on top of this. A person with weak
moral strength who encounters the commands of the Torah is liable to reach a
status of even greater moral depravity, because within every command he will
search for the permitted ways to fulfill his own lowly aspirations (and the
powerful emotions of holiness will provide an even stronger "motivation" for his
actions). For example, if a person does not have a natural understanding of the
moral depravity involved in spreading slander about another person and all of
his social interactions will be based merely on the limits of halacha, he
will be able to spend all of his days spreading slander in permitted ways –
without any feeling of how his soul is harmed by his own actions. This is what
the Rambam ruled: "Torah should only be taught to a student who is decent in his
actions or to a simple person. But if a person is on an evil path he must be
returned to a proper path and tested. Only afterwards should he be brought into
the House of Study and taught." (Laws of Torah Study, 4,1).
The Torah did not require a person to observe the commandments
for the first thirteen years of his life in order to allow him to first build up
his moral character.
D. Why is it Wrong to be Hasty about Morality?
In human history too, proper behavior preceded the Torah, as is
written: "For twenty-six generations, Derech Eretz – appropriate behavior
– preceded the Torah." (Vayikra Rabba 9,3). The Torah was not given during the
earliest years of humanity because it was first necessary to have proper
preparation in terms of values. This fact leads directly to the conclusion that
advances in Torah knowledge must never weaken natural morality. Rabbi Abraham
Isaac Kook (the first Chief Rabbi of the Land of Israel, who was one of the
spiritual giants of modern day Judaism, 1865-1935) warned about this danger. He
wrote: "It is wrong for the fear of G-d to push aside the natural morality of a
man, because if it does so it is no longer a pure example of the fear of G-d." (Orot
Hakodesh Volume 2, page 27).
An example of a very problematic suppression of natural morality
can be seen in the process of the expansion of Christianity in Europe. This
religion forced the nations of Europe to observe parts of the Torah of Israel
(many of them had developed a high cultural level but remained moral
barbarians). This coercion was accomplished without the natural preparation that
was necessary to develop the morality of the soul, and the result was therefore
not suitable for the internal nature of these nations. One of the consequences
of this process was the atrocious events of the Second World War, which acted as
a release for barbaric tendencies of the soul that were not rooted out by moral
teachings matched to the character of the people. Here is what was written by
Heinrich Heine (a Jew, one of the greatest authors and poets of modern Germany,
1797-1856): "In Germany there will take place a drama which will give the French
Revolution the appearance of a harmless idyll. Christianity has suppressed the
militaristic enthusiasm of the Germans for the time being but did not destroy
it. As soon as the restraining talisman breaks, violence will break out
again..."
There is a religious temptation to decide that by observing the
commandments a person fulfills his moral obligations. This is very dangerous
because it might cause a religious person to ignore some of the most basic
factors of his personality. Rabeinu Saadia Gaon (one of the "geniuses" of
Babylonia, the head of the yeshiva of Sura, 882-942) writes in his book "Faith
and Knowledge" (Chapter 3, 8) that a man once said to him: If a prophet would
command us to do something that contradicts the intellect or ethics we would be
required to listen to him, since the moment that G-d gave a command, the act
became true and moral. Rabeinu Saadia disagreed, and he claimed that a man who
commanded others to perform acts that are illogical could never be considered a
prophet, and therefore we would not listen to what he said. The man replied that
truth and morality are established only according to the commands of G-d and
that no human being can interfere, and he concluded that we would be required to
listen to the prophet. Rabeinu Saadia wrote that at that moment he stopped
talking to this man.
There are periods of time when those who observe the Torah might
be lacking in specific traits of proper behavior, such as love for fellow men or
the desire to mend society. This leads to moral criticism of the people, and
this can quickly be transformed into criticism of the Torah itself.
The truth is that the word of G-d will never be revealed to
mankind without a prior moral introduction, because an immoral person is neither
worthy of nor ready for the holy words. It is therefore wrong to view the word
of G-d that comes through revelation as "true morality" and to ignore everything
else on which it depends.
E. The Objective of the Torah
In view of the above, the Torah was given with a background of
the moral development that preceded it, with the goal of lifting mankind up to a
higher moral level. The Torah is the word of G-d, who turns toward mankind, and
mankind must listen to this word after having perfected Derech Eretz –
proper behavior – which lifts man up towards G-d. A lack to reach the level for
which the Torah is aiming is not a moral lack – the nations of the world are
required to be ethical, even though they are not required according to Jewish
tradition to observe the mitzvot.
But this then leaves us with a dilemma: Why did the Torah give
us commands about things which human morality had already achieved, such as
murder and robbery? There are various answers to this question. For example,
Rabeinu Saadia Gaon wrote that even the moral commandments have many details
that mankind would not have discovered on their own, and for this reason
revelation is needed. In ancient times, the Romans wrote that the Jews are
strange people because they claim that killing a young baby is the same as
murder. Human morality accepts that it is wrong to take a life, but there are
delicate questions that are very difficult to answer. For instance, is mercy
killing murder or not? Is it murder to kill a fetus or not? Is there any
difference between a fetus and a newly born infant? The Torah has provided
detailed halachic answers to these questions or has given methods to arrive at
an answer. The Maharal of Prague (a master of Kabbalah and a prominent Jewish
philosopher, 1520-1612) explains this concept in another way: From the moment
that the nation of Israel was given the command, "Thou shall not murder," the
prohibition – which until then was nothing more than a moral imperative which
helped people to achieve perfection – was transformed into a Divine command
which allows mankind to cling to the infinite. This is a new way of looking at
this prohibition, a perception which removes the prohibition from the realm of
human morality.
F. In the End – Morality Remains
An important note should be added, something that is most
relevant for the nation of Israel. In addition to the above considerations,
there is an intrinsic moral value in observing the mitzvot that stems
from the very fact that they are the words of G-d as transmitted to the children
of Israel. Any person who rebels against the source of life – against the holy
One who turned to him – is acting in a way that shows a lack of gratitude for
what G-d has given him.
The moral value of observing the mitzvot can also be
described in another way: As a Jew becomes aware of the moral value of the
appearance of Israel on the stage of history and of the Jewish contribution to
the progress of human morality, and as he begins to understand the importance of
belonging to the nation of Israel as expressed by performance of the mitzvot
– this becomes a moral imperative for him. Based on reasoning in the Kabbalah,
this approach can be expanded to a statement that the performance of a mitzva
is moral in itself, since the act of performing or ignoring a mitzva
either mends or harms the part of the world to which the mitzva is
linked. This is a way of emphasizing the moral demands on a person: a human act
can mend the situation or cause harm. (The moral character of a person will
still depend on his ability to recognize the morality of the act itself, and
therefore anybody who does not recognize the moral significance of an act or
does not view it as an obligation will not be considered an immoral person.)
Note also that the sages declared, "If there is no Derech
Eretz there is no Torah, and if there is no Torah there is no Derech
Eretz" (Pirkei Avot 3,17). That is, proper moral behavior must precede the
Torah, but after the Torah has been revealed based on the a priori existence of
Derech Eretz, a new and higher-level moral code is derived from the
Torah.
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