Soloveitchik
Soloveitchik
Soloveitchik
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Allan Nadler
INTRODUCTION
Modern Judaism 13 (1993): 119-147 ? 1993 by The Johns Hopkins University Press
120 Allan Nadler
lation. Zimzum is, "the contraction of the infinite into the finite, the
transcendant within the concrete, the supernal within the empirical,
and the divine within the realm of reality"'6 which occurs, not prior
to the genesis of the cosmos but rather at the moment that God
legislated His will to Israel at Sinai.
This startling reinterpretation of the notion of zimzum,rather than
resulting in a perceived abyss which separates God from His creation
and leading to the dualistic asceticism which characterized the Luri-
anic system, serves instead to connect God intimately with this world
via the categories of halakha and to obviate the need for the tran-
scendant, world-denying religious behaviour of homoreligiosus.As So-
loveitchik optimistically declares: "The ideal of halakhic man is the
redemption of the world not via a higher world but via the world
itself."'7
As a consequence of his harmonization of world and spirit, and
the integration of his religious cravings with mundane existence, ha-
lakhic man treasures this life and, again unlike homo religiosus, does
not perceive any spiritual liberation in death.
such that
ical works of the Gaon of Vilna and his disciples-an almost dia-
metrically opposite type of spirituality appears. The image of man
which emerges from the sources of classical mithnagdic Judaism is,
as we shall presently see, both strictly dualistic and starkly pessimistic.31
Before demonstrating how radically different halakhic man is
from mithnagdic man, we ought first to concede the one not insig-
nificant, central religious value which they share; namely, the attach-
ment of supreme sanctity to the act of Torah study and the
glorification of the Rabbinic scholar. There is no doubt, insofar as
Soloveitchik's enthusiasm for halakhic man is related to his learning
per se, that he is faithfully following in the tradition of Lithuanian
mithnagdic Judaism in which there was no more valued act than study
and no more revered man than the talmidhakham,or Rabbinic scholar.
Insofar as Halakhic Man can be classified as a panegyric to the scholar
for his erudition and his devotion to the act of study, it is certainly
an archetypical manifesto of mithnagdic spirituality, fully within the
tradition of classic mithnagdic tributes to Talmud Torah, such as Abra-
ham b. Solomon of Vilna's Ma'aloth Ha-torah, Phinehas of Polotsk's
Kether Torah and Hayyim of Volozhin's classic, intellectualistic refu-
tation of hasidic spirituality, Nefesh Ha-hayyim.32
All of these mithnagdic classics reflect an extravagant adoration
of the religious importance of Torah study and the unrivalled dis-
tinction of its practitioners. But the power of talmud Torah is itself, in
classic mithnagdic thinking, a transcendant one. Talmud Torah is
praised not so much from the subjective perspective of the autono-
mous, creative stature of the individual Jew who engages in it, but on
account of the Torah's own exalted place in the highest cosmic realms,
and the inherent powers which the Torah itself consequently pos-
sesses. The obsessive focus of the earlier mithnagdim upon the study
of Torah lishmah,or for its own sake, as the highest religious priority
did not center upon the majestic or heroic personality of the student,
but on the essential metaphysical qualities of the texts and the theurgic
consequences automatically resulting from the very act of their
study.33Soloveitchik, on the other hand, is consumed by his existential
interest in glorifying the student.
More importantly, Halakhic Man is far more than a tribute to
scholarship. It is rather a total spiritual portrait of the ideal halakhic
personality. And while his primary and most admirable trait is his
learning, Halakhic Man's grandiose conception of the halakha as an
ideal a priori system-in fact as an axiomatic basis by which to order
all of existence-results in a far more complex and comprehensive
characterisation of the soul of its students and faithful practitioners.
And the spirit of that portrait is, as we have seen, optimistic, healthy-
minded, monistic and this-worldly. Halakhic Man's greatness lies not
128 Allan Nadler
ing away into the future life. In this spirit, the GRA re-interpreted
the Biblical Job's initial "cursing of his day" and his apparent pref-
erence for death over a life of intolerable affliction. Commenting on
Job's protest that those who would naturally prefer death are com-
pelled instead to endure an unbearable life, the GRA shifts the focus
away from the text's original anti-theodicy, and suggests that man's
quest for death is due to the after-life's increased spiritual capacities:
"These are the words which Moses spoke to all Israel on the desert
east of the Jordan (everha-Yarden), the Arava, opposite Suph ..."
This world (olamhazeh)is called the Jordan; the words "everha-
Yarden"indicate that man is a mere transient sojournerin this life.
Now, just as below, the Jordan borders the land of Israel below, so
too, in the heavens, one cannot arrive in paradise before passing
through the River Dinur. Only then is the soul raised as a sacrifice.
So that "everha-Yarden"is a general statement,followedby specific
teachings. "On the desert" instructs that it is the correct thing for
man to ignore all of the passionsof this world such as food, and he
should render himself as a desert, only to studyTorah . . . "Opposite
Suph" teaches that man should alwayscontemplate the day of his
death and have his termination(soph)before his eyes at all times.42
Halakhic Man: Not a Mithnagged 131
It was decreed upon man for his own welfare that he should not live
eternally,for there is nothing better for man than the decomposition
of his physical matter; thus the Sages have instructed:"God'scom-
ment (upon havingcreated man that all was)'Verygood'-this refers
to death."43
All of the Gaon's most noted disciples followed him in both his
cosmological as well as anthropological dualism. Two themes, con-
sistent with this prevalent Rabbinic perception of the spiritually lim-
iting nature of physical human existence since the sin of Adam,
continuously recur in the later writings of the disciples of the GRA:
1) That man cannot achieve his ultimate religious perfection (i.e.,
knowledge of God) until after his departure from the material world;
2) that it is important that he be acutely aware of this limitation and
thus focus constantly on his mortality and, specifically, that he con-
sciously anticipate and intensely contemplate the day of his own death.
Consistent with this morbid and dualistic religious anthropology,
the mithnagdim were possessed by a fear of the dangerous seductions
of the evil instinct. The need to suppress the yezer ha-ra is a central
theme of all mithnagdic literature. In many mithnagdic writings, the
evil impulse of man is personified, or identified specifically with the
hasidic movement and its religious innovations.
Whereas Soloveitchik insists that "the great Jewish scholars knew
nothing about man's conflict with the evil urge,"44 the earlier mith-
nagdim often spoke of little else. The Gaon of Vilna, in his commen-
tary to the Book of Esther, viewed the entire Purim story as an allegory
for the "battle with the evil instinct" which "plagues man all of the
days of his existence on earth."45This obsession with man's struggle
against the evil urge permeates the mithnagdic manual, KetherTorah,
by the Gaon's student, Phinehas b. Judah Maggid of Polotsk. Modeled
after Bahya Ibn Pakuda's Duties of theHeart (Hovothha-Levavoth),Kether
Torah is structured as a series of elaborate refutations of the "evil
instinct" which seeks to cause man to stray from the normative path
of halakhic Judaism. Various aspects of hasidic spirituality, as well as
the trends of modernization of Jewish life beginning to appear at the
132 AUanNadler
The point is that the day of his death is the very purpose and ful-
filment of man's existence, and this fact represents the highest,
unique level of human understanding... For upon dying, man in-
stantly attains more knowledge than he cumulatively could ever
achieve all of the days of his life. In other words, at that moment,
man has wisdom that is simply impossible to acquire so long as he
remains in olamhazeh,as it is written, 'for no man can see me and
live.' But, as the Sages have said, at the moment of death he can see,
and that day of death is equal to all the days of his life. This is the
true meaning (of the verse) that 'the day of death is more precious
than the day of man's birth.'48
Son of man! Open your eyes from your blindness, and realize that
all of the possessions of this world are nothing but vanity and the
pursuits of the perplexed. For why should you so greedily desire to
accumulatesilver and gold, and to build spacioushouses, when you
are headed inevitablyto the grave, in the netherworld. Then you
will have nothing in your hand, and you will leave the results of all
of your efforts to others. Why should you be so bothered about a
world which is not really yours, for you will, quick as the blink of
an eye, go on to another world, and all that you toiled for in this
world will be as nothing, and it will turn out that you have so exerted
yourself in vain.53
Like his mithnagdic predecessors then, Meir was convinced that
true human fulfilment can only occur subsequent to man's passing
from this life:
Even if a man were to live from the very genesis of creation until
its very end, and to attainall of the gratificationsand preciousobjects
of this world, none of it is as valuable as a single moment in the
world to come.54
The very purpose and spiritual end of man's entire life is arriving
at death free from sin. Death frees man's soul from its torments and
allows him to complete his religious destiny.55 The regular contem-
134 Allan Nadler
plation on the part of man of the inevitable day of his death is there-
fore the most effective form of ethical training.56
In very sharp contrast to Halakhic Man, "Mithnagdic man" is then
thoroughly dualistic and pessimistic; and his spirituality is radically
transcendental, not at all this-worldly. Ultimately for him, due to his
naturally divided state, man has no choice but to await death in order
to achieve salvation.
In fact, in a fundamental sense, the very essence of authentic,
mithnagdism was, I believe, the rejection of the this-worldly orien-
tation of hasidism, and the strenuous re-affirmation of the dualism
of the earlier Lurianic tradition, rooted in a literal understanding of
the cosmogonic myth of zimzum. Mithnagdism, insofar as it was a
reaction to hasidism's monistic worldliness and religious optimism,
constituted a deliberate retreat from the attempt to impose spiritual
categories upon this world. Where hasidism insisted that God can be
known in time and space, that the mystical experience can be attained
through the spiritualization of the here and now, and that divine
worship can be performed through the sanctification of the material
universe, mithnagdism responded by insisting on the unbreachable,
primordial abyss which separates the created universe from the Cre-
ator, by emphatically denying the world any holiness or possibility of
sanctification and thereby deferring all ultimate spiritual felicity to
the life of the world to come.
Soloveitchik, on the other hand, insists that the entire purpose of
the law, as studied and observed by the Halakhic personality, is the
sanctification of the created, physical universe-the olam ha-zeh-by
means of the application of the a priori categories of the halakha to
mundane existence.
U-VIKASHTEM MI-SHAM
The notion that the central goal of Jewish spirituality is the wedding
of God with this world, achieved through the halakha's objectification
and concretization of spirit, is, as mentioned above, a central focus of
Soloveitchik's later essay, U-vikashtemMi-sham. It is here that Solov-
eitchik's passionate affirmation of the sanctity of this life and his con-
viction that Judaism ascribes ultimate religious significance to time
and space, find their fullest expression. This essay, arguably the most
important in Soloveitchik's oeuvre, provides a richly textured and
highly optimistic portrait of halakhic Judaism's sanctification of the
temporal and spatial categories of mundane existence.
Once again, Soloveitchik is primarily concerned, in U-vikashtem
Mi-sham, with refuting the dualism of the neo-platonic tradition and
Halakhic Man: Not a Mithnagged 135
WhereasSocratic/Platonicmetaphysics,which so stronglyinfluenced
Christianity,established its opinion that the spirit ascends on high
to the degree that the body descends below ... Judaism proclaimed
that man meritseternal life when he transformshis temporal,mean-
ingless animal existence into the sanctified life of the Godly man.
Whereas the former spoke of the eternity of the universalsoul, the
latter spoke of the eternity of the individualand the resurrectionof
the dead: It is the body, in all of its glory, which is destined to rise
from the grave.57
cantly the same. For both, the satisfaction of the material appetites
should be viewed as an opportunity for the sanctification of the created
world, rather than a sinful indulgence. Soloveitchik's conclusion that,
is not, in the end, very different from the affirmation of his older
hasidic contemporary, R. Arele Roth who, in a work devoted entirely
to the subject of the sanctity of eating, proclaims:
can study Torah and serve God-such a person does not require
any struggle or machinations(with the evil instinct)... But any per-
son who must carry upon his shoulders the burden of earning his
living,and who must therefore be surroundedby women-especially
a person who must go out into the marketplaceand public streets
and big cities-such a man requires great zeal and strength.. .70
Meir repeatedly advised his children to follow his example and
to avoid attending public events to the degree possible:
CONCLUSION
ENDNOTES
legal statutes, has received more attention than any of Soloveitchik's other
writings. A large number of essays and articles about Halakhic Man have
emerged, particularly since the appearance of the English version. Among
the most important are: Elliot Dorff, "Halakhic Man: A Review Essay," Modern
Judaism, Vol. 6, No. 1 (1986), pp. 91-98. (Dorff offers a critique of Solov-
eitchik, largely from the perspective of a Conservative philosophy of halakha)
and David Hartman, "The Halakhic Hero: Rabbi Joseph Soloveitchik's Ha-
lakhic Man," ModernJudaism, Vol. 9, No. 3 (1989), pp. 249-273. (Hartman
provides an important and cogent response to some of Dorff's most tenous
criticisms.)
For a general introduction to Soloveitchik's thought, see the fine essay by
Lawrence Kaplan, "The Religious Philosophy of Joseph B. Soloveitchik,"
Tradition, Vol. 14, No. 2 (1973), pp. 43-64.
The comprehensive, but often unfairly critical, evaluation of Soloveitchik's
philosophy by David Singer and Moshe Sokol, "Joseph Soloveitchik: Lonely
Man of Faith," ModernJudaism, Vol. 2, No. 3 (1982), pp. 227-272, includes
extensive bibliographical information on Soloveitchik's writings as well as the
scholarly literature on them.
3. See Eugene B. Borowitz, "The Typological Theology of Rabbi Joseph
B. Soloveitchik," Judaism, vol. 15, No. 2 (1966), pp. 203-210. Several years
later, while modifying his early perception of Soloveitchik's anthropology in
light of the very different spirit which emerged in the then-recently published
essay, "Lonely Man of Faith," Borowitz did not retreat so much as an inch
from his depiction of Halakhic Man as a model of mithnagdic religion:
"Indeed," Borowitz wrote, "the essay Ish Ha'halakha may be read as an anti-
hasidic tract which seeks to show, by a phenomenology of mithnagdic intel-
lectuality, that legalistic rationality contains all the spiritual and emotional
powers of Hasidism, but manages to correct its subjective excesses." See Eu-
gene Borowitz, "A Theology of Modern Orthodoxy: Rabbi Joseph B. Solov-
eitchik" in Choicesin ModernJewish Thought (New York, 1983), p. 237.
4. Even Lawrence Kaplan, the most perceptive and prolific scholar of
Soloveitchik's thought, in his "Translator's Preface" to the English edition of
Halakhic Man, cites Borowitz's characterization of the work, as a "mithnagged
phenomenology of awesome proportions" as "perhaps the best description
of Halakhic Man." I should add, at this point, that it was a question which
Professor Kaplan posed to me during a discussion of my research on early
mithnagdism, regarding the obvious discrepancies between Soloveitchik's re-
ligious anthropology and that of his Lithuanian predecessors, which
prompted the writing of this essay. See also, Prof. Aviezer Ravitsky's important
study of the respective Maimonidean and neo-Kantian roots of Soloveitchik's
epistemology, which accepts as axiomatic the fact that Soloveitchik's philos-
ophy of halakha was an accurate reflection of "the erudite world of his fore-
bears." [Aviezer Ravitsky, "Rabbi J. B. Soloveitchik on Human Knowledge:
Between Maimonides and neo-Kantian Philosophy," ModernJudaism, Vol. 6,
No. 2 (1986), pp. 157-188.
5. See Hartman's above-cited essay, "The Halakhic Hero," and cf. "So-
loveitchik's Religious Hero," in David Hartman, Conflicting Visions: Spiritual
Possibilitiesof Modern Israel (New York, 1990).
142 Allan Nadler
44. Halakhic Man, p. 65. See also, U-vikashtemMi-sham, p. 222: "The Sages
of Israel were not afflicted with the torments of battling the evil instinct,
which were so prevalent in the lives of the gentile Sages."
45. The Gaon wrote a binary commentary to the book of Esther-exoteric
and esoteric, or, as the author puts it "al derekhha-peshatve-al derekhha-remez."
It is the latter approach which interprets the entire Megillah as an allegory
for the "milhemethha-yetzer,"the battle between man's good and evil urges.
See the introductory paragraph to the "Persuhal derekhha-remez"in Biur ha-
GRA al Megillath Esther (Warsaw, 1887), p. 2a. The allegorical interpretation
of Esther is fully developed in the commentary to the first chapter of the
book.
46. Halakhic Man, p. 31. Cf. U-vikashtemMi-sham, pp. 223-224.
47. On Phinehas of Polotsk and his mithnagdic contemporaries' other-
worldliness and their religious enthusiasm regarding the spiritually liberating
significance of death, see my forthcoming book, A Religion of Limits:The Faith
of the Mithnagdim (Winter 1994). The text of Phinehas' poetic panegyric to
death is found in Appendix A of the book.
48. Menahem Mendel of Shklov, MayyimAdirim (Jerusalem, 1987), p. 2a.
49. For a full discussion of Meir b. Elijah, see my article, "Meir b. Elijah
of Vilna's MilhamothAdonai: A Late anti-Hasidic Polemic," in The Journal of
Jewish Thought and Philosophy, Vol. 1, No. 2 (1992), pp. 247-280. The dis-
cussion of Meir's thought presented herein is abstracted from that paper.
50. The "battle of the instincts" is a theme which is repeated often in
Meir's ethical will. Some extended treatments of this issue can be found in
Nahalath Avoth (Vilna, 1835), Introduction, pp. 13, 21; pp. 19b-20a, 21b.
51. See, for example, Nahalath Avoth, Introduction, p. 19; pp. 8a-b, 17a-
18b. On the spiritual value of suffering and poverty, Meir repeats the exact
sentiments of the earlier mithnagdim which have been analyzed in chapter
5 of my forthcoming Religion of Limits.
52. Meir enters into a long diatribe against the foolishness of materialism
and the vanity of hoarding money and material possessions in Nahalath Avoth,
lla-b.
53. Nahalath Avoth, p. 19b.
54. Nahalath Avoth, Introduction, p. 5b. The contempt for materialism and
the resulting glorification of both suffering and death as paths to salvation
are central themes of MilhamothAdonai. See, for example, the long discussion
of the pros and cons of human mortality on page 56. See also the similar
discussion in the "supplement" to MilhamothAdo-nai, p. 8.
55. See MilhamothAdonai, "supplement," p. 3:
The essence, end and purpose of man is this matter of death, for
only through death does he arrive at his final goal and good for
which purpose he was created-for even if he was to live for two
thousand years, enjoying all of the material pleasures and enjoyments
of the universe... this earns him no advantage in the world to
come... It is impossible to attain that boundless spiritual bliss so
long as one is trapped in his filthy body in this material universe.
But it is only death which brings him to his final purpose and destiny.
'The end of the beast is the slaughter,' that is to say, its final good
146 AUanNadler