Valuing Debate and Conversation
Jewish tradition, informed by the precedent of the Talmud, prefers to
promote discussion rather than correctness.
By Jeffrey A. Spitzer
As a student, I never understood why my teachers would
sometimes let students (including myself) go on and on expressing ideas which
were clearly incorrect. As a teacher, I’ve learned that the days of “Teaching
is talking and learning is listening” are over; a progressive teacher
understands that “Teaching is listening and learning is talking.” How happy I was to realize that the
underlying message of much of the Talmud aligns perfectly with “progressive
teaching.” The surprising conclusion of
the Talmud forces a re-evaluation of the place of open discussion in Judaism.
In the years following the destruction of the Temple in
Jerusalem in 70 CE, the sages who convened around the coastal town of Yavneh
had to determine what aspects of the Temple’s worship could be observed without
a Temple. For example, when Rosh Hashanah (the Jewish New Year) landed on the
Sabbath, should the shofar (ram’s horn) be blown?
The Mishnah (the primary book of Jewish legal opinions and
sources) reports:
"When the festival of the New Year occurs on Shabbat,
they would blow shofar in the Temple but not in the outlying areas. After the
Temple was destroyed, Rabban Yohanan ben Zakkai established that they would
blow in every place in which there is a Rabbinic court." (Rosh Hashanah
4:1)
The first statement of the Mishnah is puzzling. If blowing
shofar is melakhah (the category of work forbidden on the Sabbath), then why is
it not forbidden inside the Temple? And if blowing shofar is not melakhah, why
would it be forbidden outside of the Temple? Clearly, any solution to this
problem will need some other kind of understanding of blowing shofar.
Nevertheless, the Gemara (the commentary/interpretation of
the Mishnah by the sages of the 3rd-6th centuries CE) continues:
"From where in the Torah does this law come? Said R. Levi bar Lachma said R. Hama bar
Haninah: One verse says "a day of
complete rest commemorated with the blowing of the shofar"(Leviticus
23:24), and one verse says "it will be for you a day of blowing the
shofar"(Numbers 29:1). There is no
problem. The [first] one is when the
festival occurs on Shabbat. The
[second] one is when the festival occurs on a weekday" (Babylonian Talmud,
Rosh Hashanah 29b).
The Gemara asks a typical question: What is the biblical
basis for the law that one does not blow the shofar on Shabbat outside of the
Temple? R. Hama bar Haninah is quoted, providing a clever reading of the Torah.
Since the rabbis assume that the Torah is perfect, and perfection implies that
no words are wasted, the two verses quoted above from Leviticus and Numbers,
which appear to say the same thing, cannot, indeed, be saying the same thing.
According to Hama bar Haninah, the verse from Leviticus which uses the language
שבתון
זכרון תרועה--shabbaton zikhron teru’ah (a day of
complete rest commemorated with the blowing of the shofar)--should be
understood as “on the Shabbat, a remembrance of the blowing,” or as Rashi explains,
“and not a real blowing; rather, they recite verses about the blowing of
shofar.” This is a very clever reading of the verse from Leviticus.
Basically, R. Hama bar Haninah’s approach is that, based on
a midrash on the Torah, blowing shofar is permitted on weekdays, but forbidden
on the Sabbath. But, as the Gemara asks next:
“Said Rava: If it
[i.e. the prohibition to blow shofar on shabbat] is based on the Torah, how did
we blow shofar in the Temple?…”
Of course we knew this. At our first look at the Mishnah, we
knew that any approach that argued that blowing shofar was strictly forbidden
on the Sabbath would not explain the Mishnah; if shofar-blowing is forbidden on
the Sabbath, how were they permitted to blow shofar in the Temple. As clever as
R. Hama bar Hanina’s reading is, it is inadequate to the task of explaining the
Mishnah. So why did the Gemara even include his midrash if it was so plainly
and obviously incorrect?
The answer to this question reveals one of the underlying
truths of rabbinic Judaism. More
important than the conclusion is the process. The message of the Gemara is not
that a correct understanding is irrelevant, or that there aren’t correct (and
incorrect) understandings; to the contrary, careful thinking and evidence-based
argument are crucial. But they are not as important as allowing diverse views
to be expressed. When we examine and discuss the logic of the Mishnah, we make
sure that diverse opinions, divergent opinions, and even clearly false opinions
are given voice. To shut off the creativity of a Hama bar Haninah in this case
might indicate that all that matters is the final word. To indulge that
creativity, even when it is clearly wrong, sets the opposite precedent, and
encourages creative thinkers to take intellectual risks for the sake of Torah.
If the conversation of Torah she’b’al peh--"Oral Law"--is to proceed,
we must foster and encourage our risk-takers.
Rava does end up revealing how the Mishnah makes sense. Rava
quotes his teacher Rabbah, who argues that the prohibition against blowing
shofar outside of the Temple was a rabbinic prohibition (and not a biblical
prohibition, as Hama bar Haninah argued), which simply did not apply to the
Temple.
The Talmud now turns to the second part of the Mishnah:
“After the Temple was destroyed, Rabban Yohanan ben Zakkai established that
they would blow in every place in which there is a Rabbinic court.” The
Mishnah’s language “established” is bland and undramatic. The Talmud fills in
the details:
"After the Temple was destroyed, Rabban Yohanan ben
Zakkai established [that they would blow shofar (when Rosh Hashanah fell on
Shabbat) in any place in which there was a rabbinic court]. Our rabbis taught: Once, Rosh Hashanah fell
on Shabbat and all of the cities (Rashi comments: around Yavneh) were gathering
(Rashi explains this was in order to hear the shofar-blowing from the
representatives of the rabbinic court, just as they were used to doing in
Jerusalem). Rabban Yohanan ben Zakkai said to B'nei Beteira: Let's blow shofar. They said to him: Let's discuss/vote [first]. He said to them: Let's blow shofar and afterwards we will
vote. After they blew shofar, they said to him: Let's vote. He said to them: The horn has already been
heard in Yavneh and there is no returning after the fact."
From the first part of the Gemara, we learned that the
rabbis had ordained that shofar blowing was to be forbidden on Shabbat outside
of the Temple. Once the Temple was destroyed, is every place to be considered
“outside,” or could there be an exception? Rabban Yohanan ben Zakkai’s approach
was to make a substitution; instead of a fixed Holy Place in Jerusalem, Judaism
would find a new center in the study of Jewish texts—“any place where the
rabbinic court” was would be the new center. Rather than abrogating the earlier
rabbinic decree, Yohanan ben Zakkai applied it in a new way.
But what happened to the process? When the cautious B’nei
Beteira urge discussing the radical move, Yohanan tricks them. Once the shofar
has been blown, the crucial precedent has been set, and there is no more place
for discussion. Yohanan ben Zakkai understood that Judaism needed a new way;
B’nei Beteira may not have had that insight. But why were B’nei Beteira’s
concerns not “given a voice” like the Talmud later gave voice to Hama bar
Hanina?
Or is our understanding of the “meta-message” of the Talmud
incorrect. After all, once the Temple was destroyed, what did it matter why
they were allowed to blow the shofar on Shabbat? The Gemara’s question is
academic. Is discussion and risk-taking only tolerated when dealing with
abstract, intellectual issues? Should we silence those who dissent when they
just “don’t understand” the flow of history as we do?
No. When one looks at the Talmud, and at Jewish civilization
as a whole, it is clear that the process—open discussion—is central, and that
this story of Rabban Yohanan ben Zakkai is the exception. Indeed, the Mishnah’s
bland language--“Rabban Yohanan ben Zakkai established…”--may be a way of
covering up the embarrassing breach of the rabbinic commitment to a life of
dialogue. But what the Mishnah disguises, the Talmud reveals; the editors of
the Talmud were aware, apparently, that the heritage of a Judaism centered on
Torah study, which Yohanan ben Zakkai worked to create, is not diminished by
acknowledging the precipitous actions which the great sage took in order to
establish it. But for us to imitate Yohanan’s treatment of B’nei Beteira, would
indeed diminish our heritage.
Jeffrey Spitzer created the Rabbinics Lab, a new model
for teaching students to do original research in Rabbinic literature and to
join in the conversation of Judaism’s classical texts. He is the Senior
Educator at Jewish Family and Life!