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December 12, 2024
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Excavating the history of words can sometimes be as revealing as excavating the ruins of an ancient city. Take the English word “enthusiasm.” Today, we see this as something positive. One dictionary defines it as “a feeling of energetic interest in a particular subject or activity and an eagerness to be involved in it.” People with enthusiasm have passion, zest and excitement, and this can be contagious. It is one of the gifts of a great teacher or leader. People follow people of passion. If you want to influence others, cultivate enthusiasm.

But the word did not always have a favorable connotation. Originally it referred to someone possessed by a spirit or demon. In 17th century England, it came to refer to extreme and revolutionary Protestant sects, and—more generally—to the Puritans who fought the English Civil War. It became a synonym for religious extremism, zealotry and fanaticism. It was looked on as irrational, volatile and dangerous.

David Hume (1711-1776), the Scottish philosopher, wrote a fascinating essay on the subject. He begins by noting that “the corruption of the best things produces the worst,” and that is especially true of religion. “There are,” he says, “two ways in which religion can go wrong: through superstition and through enthusiasm. These are quite different phenomena.” Superstition is driven by ignorance and fear. We can, sometimes, have irrational anxieties and terrors, and we deal with them by resorting to equally irrational remedies. Enthusiasm is the opposite. It is the result of over-confidence. The enthusiast—in a state of high religious rapture—comes to believe that he is being inspired by God himself, and is thus empowered to disregard reason and restraint.

Enthusiasm “thinks itself sufficiently qualified to approach divinity, without any human mediator.” The person in its grip is so full of what he takes to be holy rapture that he feels able to override the rules by which priestly conduct is normally governed. “The fanatic consecrates himself and bestows on his own person a sacred character, much superior to what forms and ceremonious institutions can confer on any other.” Rules and regulations, thinks the enthusiast, are for ordinary people, not for us. We—inspired by God—know better. “That,” said Hume, “can be very dangerous indeed.”

We now have a precise description of the sin for which Nadav and Avihu—the two elder sons of Aaron—died. Clearly, the Torah regards their death as highly significant because it refers to it on no less than four occasions (Leviticus 10:1-2, 16:1, Numbers 3:4, 26:61). It was a shocking tragedy, occurring as it did on the day of the inauguration of the service of the Mishkan—a moment that should have been one of the great celebrations in Jewish history.

The Sages themselves were puzzled by the episode. The text itself merely says that “they offered unauthorized fire (esh zara) before the Lord, that He had not commanded. So fire came out from the presence of the Lord and consumed them, and they died before the Lord.” Evidently the Sages felt that there must have been something else—some further sin or character flaw—to justify such dire and drastic punishment.

Putting together clues in the biblical text, some speculated that they were guilty of entering the Holy of Holies; that they had given a ruling of their own accord without consulting Moses or Aaron; that they had become intoxicated; that they were not properly robed; that they had not purified themselves with water from the laver; that they were so self-important that they had not married, thinking no woman was good enough for them or that they were impatient for Moses and Aaron to die, so they could become the leaders of Israel.

Some speculated that the sin for which they were punished did not happen on that day at all. It had occurred months earlier at Mount Sinai. The text says that Nadav and Avihu, along with 70 elders, ascended the mountain and “saw the God of Israel,” (Exodus 24:10). God “did not raise his hand against the leaders of the Israelites; they saw God, and they ate and drank,” (Exodus 24:11). The implication is that they deserved punishment then for not averting their eyes or for eating and drinking at such a sacred encounter. But God delayed the punishment, so as not to cause grief on the day He made a covenant with the people.

These are all midrashic interpretations: true, valid and important but not the plain sense of the verse. The text is clear. On each of the three occasions where their death is mentioned, the Torah says merely that they offered “unauthorized fire.” The sin was that they did something that had not been commanded. They did so, surely, for the highest motives. Moses said to Aaron immediately after they died that this is what God had meant when he said, “‘Among those who are near me I will be sanctified,” (Leviticus 10:3). A midrash says that Moses was comforting his brother by saying, “They were closer to God than you or me.”

The history of the word “enthusiasm,” though, helps us understand the episode. Nadav and Avihu were “enthusiasts,” not in the contemporary sense, but in the sense in which the word was used in the 17th and 18th centuries. Enthusiasts were people who—full of religious passion—believed that God was inspiring them to do deeds in defiance of law and convention. They were very holy, but they were also potentially very dangerous. David Hume, in particular, saw that enthusiasm in this sense is diametrically opposed to the mindset of priesthood. In his words, “all enthusiasts have been free from the yoke of ecclesiastes, and have expressed great independence of devotion; with a contempt of forms, ceremonies and traditions.”

Priests understand the power, and thus the potential danger, of the sacred. That is why holy places, times and rituals must be guarded with rules; the way a nuclear power station must be protected by the most careful insulation. Think of the accidents that have occurred when this has failed: Chernobyl, for example, or Fukushima in Japan, in 2011. The results can be devastating and lasting.

To bring unauthorized fire to the Tabernacle might seem a small offense, but a single unauthorized act in the realm of the holy causes a breach in the laws around the sacred that can grow in time to a gaping hole. Enthusiasm—harmless though it might be in some of its manifestations—can quickly become extremism, fanaticism and religiously motivated violence. That is what happened in Europe during the wars of religion in the 16th and 17th centuries, and it is happening in some religions today. As David Hume observed: “Human reason and even morality are rejected (by enthusiasts) as fallacious guides, and the fanatic madman delivers himself over blindly,” to what he believes to be divine inspiration, but what may in fact be overheated self-importance or frenzied rage.

We now understand in detail that the human brain contains two different systems, what Daniel Kahneman calls “thinking fast and slow.” The fast brain—the limbic system—gives rise to emotions, particularly in response to fear. The slow brain—the prefrontal cortex—is rational, deliberative and capable of thinking through the long term consequences of alternative courses of action. It is no accident that we have both systems. Without instinctive responses, triggered by danger, we would not survive. But without the slower, deliberative brain, we would find ourselves time and again engaging in destructive and self-destructive behavior. Individual happiness and the survival of civilization depend on striking a delicate balance between the two.

Precisely because it gives rise to such intense passions, the religious life in particular needs the constraints of law and ritual, the entire intricate minuet of worship, so that the fire of faith is contained—giving light and a glimpse of the glory of God. Otherwise, it can eventually become a raging inferno, spreading destruction and claiming lives. After many centuries in the West, we have tamed “enthusiasm” to the point where we can think of it as a positive force. We should never forget, however, that it was not always so. That is why Judaism contains so many laws and so much attention to detail—and the closer we come to God, the more we need.

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