R’ Avraham Yafen asks (in haMussar V’ha’Da’as) what kind of shiur this
measure of 40 years is. A really bright student might
understand his rebbe’s torah faster; a slower student will have to review it
more. Someone who is learning every
spare minute for years and years will be able to master that much more torah
than someone who only learns sporadically.
Grasping what a rebbe gives over is a matter of intelligence, diligence,
effort – the sheer passage of time, whether one year or 40, seems to have
nothing to do with it?
There are two things that a rebbe gives over: 1) knowledge – data,
information, facts; 2) behavior – midos, hanhagos, attitude, hashkafa. Of course, says R’ Yafen, a bright student
will grasp a shiur far quicker than a slow student and someone who puts in
effort will walk away knowing more than a slacker. But Chazal here are not speaking about
picking up information from a rebbe, being able to say over a hesber of a
Tosfos or a Rambam or having a mehaleich in approaching a sugya. Chazal are speaking about a person’s behavior
and conduct, a person’s attitude and outlook on life. That’s not something that can be learned
through reviewing a shiur an extra time and is not something that can be acquired
with intelligence alone – it’s takes life’s experiences for the message to
penetrate and resonate. That’s what
takes 40 years to seep in.
Had you told me this answer 20 years ago, I think I would have
been skeptical. Now, I think there is a
good deal of truth to it. If you ask me
about it 20 years from now, I think I will be 100% convinced.
The lesson here is for parents and teachers more than
students. Do you have the feeling that you
are talking to the walls when you speak to your children? Are they not listening to anything you
say? Maybe they are, but you won’t know
it until 40 years later. Don’t give up
just because you don’t see immediate results, as frustrating as it is (and
believe me, I feel the frustration).
Aside from the derash, the plain meaning of the pasuk is hard to
comphrehend. The generation who apparently
didn’t get it, the generation that lived during the 40 years prior to Moshe’s
words spoken here, was the dor de’ah, the dor that experienced yetzi’as Mitzrayim with
all its miracles, the dor that stood at Har Sinai and personally witnessed
kabalas haTorah. With all its faults,
with all the trials in the midbar, this is the dor that Moshe thinks didn’t got
the message? Isn’t the dor de’ah a
generation that we hold up as exemplars of fidelity to Hashem?
The Sefas Emes explains that the previous generation lived in a
cocoon, surrounded by Hashem’s presence, divorced from the world. Of course under those conditions they were
close to Hashem. Moshe was telling the new dor that they alone had the challenge of trying to transform a lev so it has da’as, eynayim liros, oznayim
lishmoa. It was this new dor that was charged with using the physical world in their avodas Hashem rather than sealing themselves off from it. That, the dor de'ah, for all its
greatness, did not achieve.
Nice piece. Bear in mind that Dovid Hamelech writes ארבעים שנה אקוט בדור ואמר עם תעי לבב הם והם לא ידעו דרכי אשר נשבעתי ואפי אם יבואון אל מנוחתי, so clearly the previous generation didn't get it. Where is the Sfas Emes? Shkoiach.
ReplyDeleteHere's a link to the Sefas Emes:
ReplyDeletehttp://hebrewbooks.org/pdfpager.aspx?req=19058&st=&pgnum=102
Another hesber here as well:
http://hebrewbooks.org/pdfpager.aspx?req=19058&st=&pgnum=109&hilite=
(Maybe I will post that one too)
So you're saying that Shimusha shel Torah (Brachos 7b and the Ri MeiKurbil in Kesuvos 17a) is a process that can't be hurried. That may be true, but I guarantee that it can be slowed.
ReplyDeletethx. second link is missing something at the end.
ReplyDeletehttp://hebrewbooks.org/pdfpager.aspx?req=19058&st=&pgnum=109
ReplyDeleteThis one should work