April 14, 2024
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Two Jews, Three Opinions: Parshat Korach

We all nod our heads in agreement when we hear the phrase, “Two Jews, three opinions.” We similarly chuckle when we hear the anecdote about the Jew who was discovered after years of living alone on a desert island. His rescuers noticed that he had built two huts aside from the one he lived in. He told the puzzled people who saved him that they were shuls, or syn­agogues. When asked why he needed two shuls, he retorted, “One is the one in which I pray, and the other is the one into which I would never set foot.”

We have no trouble believing that Jews tend to be contentious and have to express their disagreements with others, even when stranded alone on a desert island. The ques­tion that must be asked is whether or not this contentiousness is a good thing.

Long ago, one could find unanimi­ty among wise men about certain values. Everyone consented that wisdom, dili­gence, and harmony were values worthy of acclaim. Then a great philosopher, Er­asmus, came along and wrote a book enti­tled In Praise of Folly. No longer could pro­ponents of wisdom pretend that everyone agreed with them.

More recently, the philosopher and mathematician Bertrand Russell wrote an essay entitled “In Praise of Idleness.” Gone from the list of universally held virtues were diligence and hard work.

What about concepts such as peace and harmony? Have they also suffered the fate of the aforementioned values? Have people be­gun to believe that contentiousness and ar­gumentativeness, if not outright strife, are to be extolled?

This week’s Torah portion, Parshat Korach (Numbers 16:1-18:32), provides the occasion to reflect on just such questions. Korach is the biblical paradigm of the contentious individu­al. He is, to say the least, dissatisfied with Mo­ses’ leadership style and calls into question the entire social hierarchy with which he was con­fronted. According to the rabbis, he was even skeptical of various rituals, not being able to accept that a house full of holy books required a mezuzah, or that a tallit made entirely of blue colored wool required tzitzit with the blue colored fringe. He had no difficulty find­ing contentious companions, and he eventu­ally organized them into a band of rebels and fomented a full-fledged revolt against the au­thority of Moses and Aaron.

For the rabbis of the Talmud, Korach epit­omizes the negative trait of machloket, strife and discord. A famous passage in Ethics of the Fathers distinguishes between legitimate dis­putes, those which are “for the sake of heav­en,” and those which are not so motivated. They add: “What is an example of a dispute for the sake of heaven? The dispute between Hil­lel and Shammai. What is an example of one not for the sake of heaven? The dispute of Ko­rach and all his company.” The former type of dispute has enduring value, the latter does not.

From this passage it is apparent that our sages do not categorically oppose dispute, debate, and argument. Rather, everything de­pends upon the motive. If the motive is a no­ble one, “for the sake of heaven,” then debate is not only tolerated but it is considered valua­ble. If the motive is ignoble, and certainly if it is merely contentious, it is strongly condemned.

An example of such a harsh condemnation is to be found in the Midrash on this week’s To­rah portion. The Midrash points out how each of the letters comprising the word machloket represents a different vile trait. Thus, the first letter, mem, stands for makkah, wound. The letter chet stands for charon, wrath. The letter lamed begins the word lakui, smitten. The let­ter kuf represents klala, curse. The final letter tav stands for tachlit, which is often translated as goal or objective, but in this context means a final tragic ending.

But just as much as improperly motivat­ed disputes were condemned by our sages, so did they find value in disputes which had a constructive purpose. They particularly appre­ciated disputes which were motivated by the search for truth. Hence, hardly a page in the thousands of pages of the Talmud does not record strong differences of opinion between the rabbis.

It is noteworthy in this regard that eve­ry single chapter of the work known as the Mishnah, which is the core around which the Talmud developed, contains a dispute be­tween the rabbis on one point or another. The only exception to this is the fifth chapter of the tractate Zevachim, “Ayzahu mekoman,” which begins with the question, “What is the location for the Temple sacrifices?” No dispute at all is recorded in this unique chapter. Yet this is the chapter chosen for inclusion in the daily prayer book. It has been argued that it is precisely this chapter, devoid of even a trace of contentiousness, which merited its inclu­sion in our sacred liturgy.

An objection has been raised to the cri­terion “for the sake of heaven” as a legitimate motive for dispute. Surely men have been motivated to commit horrible evil because they believed they were acting “for the sake of heaven.” One of the strongest arguments raised by freethinkers against religion is the fact that so much blood has been spilled over the millennia by people who were convinced that they were performing God’s will.

It is to counter such an objection that the rabbis gave as an example of an appropriate dispute: the machloket between Hillel and Shammai. The disagreements between these two sages, and their disciples down through the generations, were characterized by toler­ance and friendship, so much so that the Tal­mud records more than one incident when Hillel came around to Shammai’s way of think­ing, and when Shammai conceded to Hillel.

The disputes between Hillel and Shammai endure to this very day. Although we generally rule in accordance with the opinion of the for­mer, we carefully attended to the arguments of the latter. I for one am convinced that we do so to perpetuate the attitudes of attentiveness and harmony which both Hillel and Shammai advocated and enacted.

Students of Torah must not only study the content of these ancient disputes, they must also learn to re-create the atmosphere which prevailed among the disputants, an atmos­phere of civility and mutual respect and a will­ingness to concede one’s original position in order to achieve the truth.

Rabbi Tzvi Hersh Weinreb is the Executive Vice Presi­dent Emeritus of the Orthodox Union.

Rabbi Dr. Tzvi Hersh Weinreb

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